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Word: connect (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Usage:

...things up. Harrison hit for three bases and scored when a throw to catch him off third was missed. Heinz walked, Ayres popped to third, and de Rahm hit, stealing to second. Powell's fly to right was not deep enough to score on, and Safford was unable to connect, making the third...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: STARS VICTORIOUS OVER ROVERS | 10/9/1914 | See Source »

...progress toward this has been. We Would like to call his attention to a few casual examples of labor in outside fields by members of the Faculty-to the work of professor Swain on Engineering and Transit Commissions; to the work, within the last week, of professor Bullock in connection with the State Committee on Preservation and Taxation of Forest Lands; to the work of The of Professor Holcombe as a member of the first Minimum Wage Board in the country; to the work of Professor Taussig, for years the recognized leader of Free Trade in the United States. These...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DISAPPOINTING EXAGGERATION | 3/24/1914 | See Source »

Details of all the big athletic events of direct interest to Harvard scheduled for today will be announced by the CRIMSON on its score board in the Harvard Union this afternoon. A direct line, especially leased for the CRIMSON'S use, will connect its representative at Osborne Field, Princeton, with the operator in the Union. Not only the report of the University-Princeton football game, but also a full and accurate announcement as to the results of the Harvard-Yale cross-country run in New Haven, the Freshman-Cornell 1917 game on Soldiers Field, the Harvard-Princeton soccer game...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DIRECT WIRE TO THE CRIMSON | 11/8/1913 | See Source »

...Yard is divided into three parts: grass, buildings, and paths. The grass was planted to make the Yard look green and beautiful, the buildings were built to hold recitations and students; and the paths, or places where there is no grass, were made to connect all the buildings, so that students could go from building to building easily. Some students don't know these things. They think that the grass was planted to prevent sore feet from walking on the hard paths. And they don't know that it is a sign of mental weakness to change their minds when...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PESTS: ELM TREE AND OTHERWISE | 9/26/1913 | See Source »

...some ship specially provided for the purpose. The details have not been worked out, but it is hoped that they may prove attractive to those men who would like some knowledge of gunnery, navigation and engineering as they are practiced in the Navy. It may be possible to connect such work with the Naval Reserve so that graduates who had spent one or more summers in this way might be enrolled as part of the Reserve for service in case of war. This training, if it is possible to arrange a satisfactory plan, would be useful to the individual...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Opportunity for Sea Training. | 2/10/1913 | See Source »

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